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Economic Modelling Lecture 9 Stabilisation of Inflation and Unemployment using Money Supply 1 Needs for Stabilisation: Costs of Inflation • Inflation distorts relative prices and makes the market system less efficient as prices cannot signal relative scarcity. • Inflation transfers resources from creditors to debtors • Redistributes income from fixed income group to property holders. • Taxes are not indexed for inflation, low income families are pushed up to the tax threshold. • Shoe leather and bookkeeping costs rise with inflation • It creates uncertainty. Creates illusions, confusions and complicates economic calculations. • It is harmful for economic growth; reduces saving and investment activities • It create social tension 2 Needs for Stabilisation: Costs of Unemployment • Loss of output and income and utility • Personal psychological costs – – – – – – – Unhappiness Stress and tension Discouragement and disappointment Morale and motivation Uncompetitive feeling Dignity of human life Insecurity Loss of productive skills productivity Lack of learning by doing opportunity Rise in social unrest and crimes 3 Standard Measures of Stabilisation (Such as Stability and Growth Pact) • Control of Aggregate Demand – Increase or decrease in money supply – Control in the tax and spending programme – Monetisation or contraction of the budget deficit • Aggregate supply – Wage renegotiations – Efficiency enhancing measures • Trade and Exchange Rates Measures – Appreciation or depreciation of the currency – Trade and exchange rate agreements 4 Unemployment, Output and Inflation : Okun and Phillips Curves Unemployment and Output gap (Okun’s Curve) ut u a g y,t g y,n t 1 Rate of growth of output above the natural rate means lower unemployment rate. Inflation and unemployment gap (assuming adaptive expectation) t but un t1 te t 1 Link between rate of inflation and rates of growth money supply and output t gm,t g y,t Sacrifice ratio: u un 1 t sr t t 1 b 5 Inflation Reduction Programme: Output, Inflation and Unemployment Unemployment and output gap (Okun’s law) ut u a g y,t g y,n t 1 (1) Phillip’s curve (expectation augmented): t t 1 but un (2) Relation between growth rates of money, output and inflation g y,t gm,t t (3) g y,t is actual growth rate of output; g y,n is natural growth rate of output gm,t is growth rate of money supply t is inflation rate; ut is actual unemployment rate; un natural rate of unemployment 6 Stabilisation: Table 1 u t u t 1 0.5g yt 2% t t 1 ut 3% ; g yt g mt t Year Inflation Unemploy ment rate Growth rate of output 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 2 2 3 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 3 3 2 0 2 2 2 2 2 2 4 2 Growth rate of money supply 11 8 9 8 7 6 5 4 6 4 7 A Smooth Inflation Reduction Programme 6 4 pi 2 u 0 gy gm 8 6 4 2 0 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 8 Role of Expectation in An Economy • • • • • • • • • Future is unknown and uncertain. Some consumers and investors are more optimistic and confident about the future the economy (about income, output and prices that affect their decision to work and invest) than others. These perceptions about the future affect all types of economic activities. How do these expectations affect macroeconomic behaviour? It is obvious from what we see in the markets. Prosperity follows from good expectations. Recession arises with dim expectations. Confidence of consumers and producers, which itself is based in a set of leading indicators of the economy, signals about the health of the economy as is discussed almost every hour in the media, particularly in case of highly integrated stocks and bonds markets around the globe. There are three different ways of forming expectations about unknown variables: Perfect foresight; Adaptive expectation and partial adjustment; Rational expectation. 9 Supply Shock and Stagflation LAS e Stagflation e AS1 AS=f(w,pe) a y y e t or s bu u n e AD =f(M,G, T) o yy yy u un u un u un y y 10 Adaptive and Rational Expectation Views on a Positive Demand Shock LAS SAS c P2 b P1 P P0 a AD1 AD0 0 Reply to demand shock Adaptive Expectation: a to b to c Rational expectation: a to c Yn Y 11 ............................... Policy Options Actual inflation Expected inflation Unemployment rate A Low Low u = un B Low High u > un C High Low u < un D High High u = un Pr ivate Sector Government Sector H L L 3,3 5,3 0,0 H 3,0 Policy options and its outcome LPC Inflation PC2 Cooperative solution A is better but it is not stable. H PC1 C (3,-3) L t e bu t u n D (-3,0) A(0,0) uL C is the most preferred and B is the least wanted scenario of the government. Non cooperative Nash Solution of this Game is at point D with high inflation and Natural rat of unemploym rate. B(-5,-3) un Unemployment rate, u. uH Inflation Policy Game 12 Lucas Critique of the IS-LM Model Consumption: Disposable income: C a bY d Y d Y T (1) (2) (3) I r I qr 0 Demand for real balances: M kY r (4) P National income identity: Y C I G (5) Investment: r 1 kY M P a bT I qr G 0 Y (6) 1b 1 b Y a bT I G Model I: IS curve: 0 r q a bT I q M G 1 M a bT I q kY G Model II: ISLM 0 P Y 0 P q 1b k , Y 1b Households and firms already know the parameters like a, b, q, I0, k. They fully anticipate and adjust their behaviour when G, T or M change. Anticipated fiscal and monetary policies do no have any impacts in Y, I or 13 employment but only on prices and wages. Rational Expectation Conditional expectation about a variable X at time t+1 using all available information existing at time t Et X t 1 ~ t X t Information set t It contains past values of endogenous and policy variables and future predicted values of exogenous variables. Three methods of forming rational expectation 1. Survey of opinion –asking people, economist, CEOs, consumers, about the their opinion about a variable. 2. Using current value of variable as the best predictor of future. 3. Extrapolative model based forecasts (Lucas (1976), Wallis (1977), Lee et.a. (2000)). 14 References • • Blanchard (9,23) Bank of England (1999) The Transmission Mechanism of Monetary Policy www.bankofengland.co.uk. • Blanchard, O.J. and L. Summers (1986), "Hysteresis and the European Unemployment Problem," NBER Macroeconomics Annual, the MIT Press. Blanchard O.J.and Kiyotaki (1987) Monopolistic competition and the effects of aggregate demand, American Economic Review, 77: September, pp 647-66 Goodhart C.E.A. (1994) What should central banks do? What should be their macroeconomic objective and operations?, Economic Journal, 104, November, 1424-1436. • • • Rogoff, K (1999) "International institutions for reducing global financial instability", Journal of Economic Perspectives, 1999 or NBER WP 7265. 15